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\section{Project Overview}
In this section you will describe the overview of your project. 
While in this section, make sure that you cover all of the  
required in the rubric.

One advantage that WYSIWYG\footnote{What You See Is What You Get} word processors have is that, well, what you see is what you get. Those of us who can remember typing term papers out on IBM Selectrics (or worse, Remington Manuals $\dots$) will immediately point out that those, too, were \wys document creation tools. The difference between them is that a typewriter is more predictable than a computer, and has to be rebooted less. Oh, and also that a typewriter is only as flexible as its spacing complexity, and interchangeable typefaces, and may not have justification built in, and (well, you get the idea).

One major frustration found in \wys editors such as Microsoft Word is that often it is hard to make the document look like you want it to in the first place. Examples of this are captions that don't stay with figures, numbering routines that inexplicably shift to the middle of the page, or magically change into Roman (or roman) numerals add unforeseen times, and (of course) the phantom \textbf{Error! Reference Source Not Found} that is most likely to appear when one is printing the final version of a thesis onto expensive rag paper, or just after the camera-ready copy of a conference paper has been submitted one minute before the deadline.

\latex is a very old (by word processing standards) program that attempts to address problems such as these for documents that must appear as if they had been typeset. The program \tex was designed to serve as an electronic typesetting program. It provides, however, some macro capabilities, which is where \latex enters the picture. \latex is designed to be a WSEFIWYG\footnote{What Someone Else Formats Is What You Get} word processing program, which uses \tex as its execution semantics, but provides high-level domain-specific commands for authors of \emph{technical documents}.

Note that we emphasize \emph{technical documents}. While you may have just now suddenly realized the great pun that \latex makes, more importantly you should realize that when composing a letter to your grandmother, or perhaps an e-mail to your significant other to ask whether lunch is in order, \latex may not actually be the right tool for you to use. It is designed to simplify the work required for a large number of people to produce a format-restricted and/or technically rich document that must conform to certain standards or be reformatted by another program. For these purposes, \latex is far superior to Word. However, a great deal of time (or experience) is required to produce the formatting commands that make \latex useful as a processor, so before you decide to rewrite your resum\'e just for fun, be warned that you are probably in for a long ride.